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Clean Energy Project Analysis Course

Clean Energy Project Analysis Course. Photovoltaic Project Analysis. Photovoltaics on National Research Laboratory, Quebec, Canada . Photo Credit: CANMET Energy Technology Centre -Varennes. © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004 . Objectives.

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Clean Energy Project Analysis Course

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  1. Clean Energy Project Analysis Course Photovoltaic Project Analysis Photovoltaics on National Research Laboratory, Quebec, Canada Photo Credit: CANMET Energy Technology Centre -Varennes © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  2. Objectives • Review basics ofPhotovoltaic (PV) systems • Illustrate key considerations forPV project analysis • Introduce RETScreen® PV Project Model © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  3. What do PV systems provide? Solar Home Lighting System,West Bengal, India • Electricity (AC/DC) • Pumped Water • …but also… • Reliability • Simplicity • Modularity • Image • Silence Photos Credit: Harin Ullal (NREL PIX) © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  4. Components of PV Systems • Modules • Storage: batteries, tank • Power conditioner • Inverter • Charge controller • Rectifier • DC-DC converter • Other generators: diesel/gasoline, wind turbine • Pump Source: Photovoltaics in Cold Climates, Ross & Royer, eds. © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  5. On-Grid Systems • PV Integration • Distributed • Centralised • Grid-Type • Central • Isolated • Not usuallycost-effective • without subsidies Source: Photovoltaics in Cold Climates, Ross & Royer, eds. © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  6. Off-Grid Systems • Configuration • Stand-alone • Hybrid • Often very cost-effective • Small loads best (< 10 kWp) • Lower capital costs than grid extension • Lower O&M costs than gensets and primary batteries Source:Photovoltaics in Cold Climates, Ross & Royer, eds. © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  7. Water Pumping Systems • Special class of off-grid system • Often cost-effective • Livestock watering • Village water supply • Domestic water supply Source: Photovoltaics in Cold Climates,Ross & Royer, eds. © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  8. Solar Resource • 1 Wp of PV= 800 to 2,000 Whper year • Latitude • Cloudiness • Winter solar resource critical foroff-grid systems • Higher tilt angles (latitude +15º) • Hybrid systems • Annual solar resource critical foron-grid systems • Trackers when high proportion of beam radiation Photo Credit: Environment Canada © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  9. Solar-Load Correlation Positive Negative • Seasonal correlation • Irrigation • Cottage systems • Diurnal correlation • Positive, zero & negative Photo Credit: Sandia Nat. Lab. (NREL PIX) Source: Photovoltaics in ColdClimates,Ross & Royer, eds. Zero Photo Credit: BP Solarex (NREL PIX) © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  10. Examples of PV System Costs • On-grid house, 1 kW(38ºN, California) • Energy= 1.6 MWh/year • Cost= $0.35/kWh • Grid Cost=$0.08/kWh • Off-grid telecom hybrid, 2.5 kW (50ºS, Argentina) • Energy=5MWh/year, (PV=50%) • Cost=$2.70/kWh • Genset/Battery Cost= $4.00/kWh © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  11. Photovoltaic Project Considerations • Distance to grid • Cost of site visits • O&M costs • Reliability vs. cost • Managing expectations • Social aspects • Value of intangibles • Image • Environmental benefits • Reduced noise and visual pollution • Modularity & simplicity NorthwesTel Mountaintop Repeater Station, Northern British Columbia, Canada Photo Credit: Vadim Belotserkovsky © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  12. Examples: Tibet, Botswana, Swaziland and KenyaSolar Light and Home PV Systems • Cost of grid extension prohibitive • Small loads • Maintained locally • Simple • Reliable Batik for Educational Purposes Solar Home System Photo Credit: Simon Tsuo (NREL PIX) Photo Credit: Frank Van Der Vleuten (Renewable Energy World) Medical Clinic Staff Housing Solar Home System Photo Credit: Energy Research Center of the Netherlands Photo Credit: Energy Research Center of the Netherlands Photo Credit: Vadim Belotserkovsky © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  13. Examples: Finland and CanadaRemote Cottages and Homes • Modular • Simple • Reduced noise • No power lines • Cottage: seasonal load correlation • Year-round: hybrid systems Cottage Home Photo Credit: Fortum NAPS (Photovoltaics in Cold Climates) Photo Credit: Vadim Belotserkovsky Hybrid System Photo Credit: Vadim Belotserkovsky © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  14. Examples: Morocco and BrazilHybrid Village Power Systems • Cost of grid extension prohibitive • Cost of diesel fuel and genset maintenance high • Human Aspects • Expectations • Managing demand • Social impacts Village Rural College Photo Credit: BP Solarex (NREL PIX) Photo Credit: Roger Taylor (NREL PIX) © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  15. Examples: Antarctica and CanadaIndustrial System: Telecom & Monitoring • Very remote sites… • Cost of O&M • Genset and PV complementary • …and even sitesneargrid… • Transformer cost • Can be relocated • More reliable than grid Seismic Monitoring System Photo Credit: Northern Power Systems (NREL PIX) Gas Well-head Monitoring System Photo Credit: Soltek Solar Energy © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  16. Examples: Switzerland and JapanOn-Grid Buildings with PV • Not usuallycost-effectivewithout subsidies • Justified by: • Image • Environmental benefits • Market stimulus • Long-term commitments by manufacturers, governments andutilities have reduced costs Solar Roofing System Photo Credit: Atlantis Solar Systeme AG PV Integrated in Office Glazing Photo Credit : Solar Design Associates(IEA PVPS) © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  17. Examples: India and USAWater Pumping PV Systems • Cost-effective when off-grid • Load correlation • Storage in water tank • Seasonal load correlation • Improved water quality • Convenient • Reliable • Simple Domestic Water Cattle Watering System Photo Credit: Jerry Anderson,Northwest Rural Public Power District (NREL PIX) Photo Credit: Harin Ullal, Central Electronics Ltd. (NREL PIX) © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  18. RETScreen® Photovoltaic Project Model • World-wide analysis of energy production, life-cycle costsand greenhouse gas emissions reductions • On-grid (central or isolated grids) • Off-grid(PV-battery or PV-genset-battery) • Water pumping • Only 12 points of data for RETScreen®vs. 8,760 for hourlysimulation models • Currently not covered: • Concentrator systems • Loss-of-load probability calculations © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  19. RETScreen®PV Energy Calculation See e-Textbook Clean Energy Project Analysis: RETScreen® Engineering and Cases Photovoltaic Project Analysis Chapter © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  20. Example Validation of the RETScreen®PV Project Model • PV/genset/battery hybrid system in Argentina comparedto HOMER hourly simulation • 500 WAC load • 1 kWp array, 60 kWh battery, 7.5 kW genset, 1kW inverter Comparing Genset Fuel Consumption Calculated by RETScreen and HOMER Comparing PV Energy Production Calculated by RETScreen and HOMER © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  21. Conclusions • PV for on-grid & off-grid electricity, water pumping • The solar resource is good around the world • PV systems installed in all climates • Capital costs high • Cost-effective off-grid • Subsidies required for on-grid • RETScreen® is an annual analysis with monthly resource calculation that can achieve accuracy comparableto hourly simulation models • RETScreen® can provide significant preliminary feasibility study cost savings © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

  22. For further information please visit the RETScreen Website at www.retscreen.net Questions? Photovoltaic Project Analysis Module RETScreen® International Clean Energy Project Analysis Course © Minister of Natural Resources Canada 2001 – 2004.

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